Russia’s navy on Tuesday morning test-fired supersonic antiship missiles at a mock target in the Sea of Japan, the Russian defence ministry has revealed.
The ministry on Tuesday disclosed that two ships launched a missile attack on a simulated enemy warship located about 100km (62 miles) away. Two Moskit supersonic cruise missiles that have conventional and nuclear warhead capacity, successfully hit their target, the ministry said.
‘In the waters of the Sea of Japan, missile ships of the Pacific Fleet fired Moskit cruise missiles at a mock enemy sea target,” the ministry said in a statement on its Telegram account on Tuesday.
‘The target, located at a distance of about 100 kilometres (62.14 miles), was successfully hit by a direct hit from two Moskit cruise missiles,’ it added.
Read Also: Zelenskyy Accuses Russia Of ‘Radiation Blackmail’
The P-270 Moskit missile, which has the NATO reporting name SS-N-22 Sunburn, is a medium-range supersonic cruise missile of Soviet origin and is capable of destroying a ship within a range of up to 120km (75 miles).
The Russian navy’s missile firing exercise comes a week after two Russian strategic bomber planes, capable of carrying nuclear weapons, flew over the Sea of Japan for more than seven hours in what Moscow said was a “planned flight”.
Russia’s defence ministry said the exercise on Tuesday took place in Peter the Great Bay in the Sea of Japan, but it did not give more precise coordinates, according to the Associated Press.
Japan’s Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi said his country would stay vigilant against Moscow’s military operations, while adding that no damage had been reported after the missile launches.
‘As Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continues, Russian forces are also becoming more active in the Far East, including Japan’s vicinities,’ Hayashi told a regular press conference, according to Reuters news agency.
Japan’s Defence Ministry had no immediate response.
The announcement of the weapon’s test follows just weeks after Moscow reported that a Russian submarine in the Sea of Japan had hit a land target more than 1,000km (620 miles) away with a Kalibr cruise missile in a drill.
Africa Today News, New York reports that Russia’s defence ministry published a video on March 3 showing the missile emerging from under the water and then hitting a target at a training area in Russia’s eastern Khabarovsk region.
Russia, mired in a decades-old territorial dispute with Tokyo over a chain of Pacific islands, said an undetermined number of its Pacific Fleet ships, jets and drones were also involved in the drill, securing the perimeter.
Moscow has employed Kalibr missiles to hit several targets in Ukraine, including power stations, by launching them from ships and submarines in the Black Sea.
Tasuku Matsuki, a representative of the Japanese Foreign Ministry responsible for Russia, stated that despite facing the water separating the two countries, the exercise’s location, Peter the Great Bay, is considered to be on the Russian coast and that Japan does not intend to protest the missile test.
‘On the whole, Japan is concerned about Russia’s increasing military activities around the Japanese coasts and watching them with great interest,’ Matsuki said, according to the Associated Press.
He said Russia has conducted missile drills in that area in the past and issued maritime advisories ahead of time. He said Japan is not in a position to comment on Russia’s intention for the exercise.